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Chiefs’ Harrison Butker’s Public Prayer for Charlie Kirk
Main Image: Mark J. Rebilas Imagn Images

As the nation processes the shock of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk’s assassination in Utah, Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker has emerged as one of the most prominent public voices bridging faith, sport, and the broader cultural conversation.

Butker Balances Faith and Football

The kicker took to his social media page to post to eulogize the departed political commentator while sharing the close relationship they shared.

“Thank you for your strong witness for Christ @charliekirk11. Thank you for pursuing the truth and leading your family as a husband and father. Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May their soul and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen,” Butker wrote in his statement.

Uncharted Waters

NFL players in solidarity with Butker

This week, however, the tone has shifted. Butker’s words of prayer came alongside a wave of grief and condemnation from across the sports world. New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart and Baltimore Ravens star Lamar Jackson both expressed sorrow and outrage, joining political leaders and faith communities in warning against the rising tide of extremism and violence in America.

The kicker, a three-time Super Bowl champion and former NFL scoring leader, made all three of his field goal attempts for the Chiefs in Week 1. He did, however, miss a game-tying extra point attempt in the third quarter. That was a crucial miss. In that game he drilled a 59-yard field goal at the end of the first half against the Los Angeles Chargers even though that was not enough to prevent the 27-21 season opener defeat.

Ninth season with Chiefs

The 2017 seventh-round pick out of Georgia Tech has become one of the NFL’s best kickers, breaking the Chiefs’ franchise record with a 62-yard field goal in 2022. Butker helped them win their first Super Bowl in 50 years in 2020, added a second Lombardi Trophy in 2023, and he kicked the field goal that forced overtime in a Super Bowl win over San Francisco in February 2024.

Drafted by the Carolina Panthers in 2017 and signed by the Chiefs the same year, he has since cemented his place as one of the NFL’s most dependable kickers.

His 2024-25 season saw him convert 21 of 25 field goal attempts (84%) and 29 of 31 extra points, statistics that underscore his steady hand in big-game situations. The 29-year-old and the Chiefs prepare to host the reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles at Arrowhead Stadium this Sunday. The game offers the team a chance to avoid a third straight loss.

This article first appeared on Last Word On Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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